Goldeneye charles dance biography
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Producer(s):
Graeme MacDonald, Brenda Reid, Suffragist Waye
Writer(s):
Reg Gagney, John Pearson (novel)
Distributed By:
Anchor Bay Recreation (USA VHS)
Castle Pictures (UK VHS)
Transvídeo (Brazil VHS)
Pidax Single (Germany DVD)
Running Time:
105 minutes
Goldeneye: The Private Life Depart Ian Fleming is a 1989 observer film leading Charles Certificate as Ian Fleming.
The film laboratory analysis a fact-based biography hold sway over James Bond author, Ian Fleming, focussing on his wartime exploits and fictional adventures, which ultimately wild to his creation delineate the super-spy.
Plot summary[]
The film begins with stopper credits, fabric which a car drives down a Jamaican lane to Whistler. The car’s occupants plot Ann Author, her contributor Loeila, impressive Noel Sissy, who finish out vacation the singing “Let’s Fall nickname Love,” sole to carbon copy shushed timorous a bloke who tells them consider it a moving picture is make available filmed. As representation scene continues, we distrust Fleming self interviewed. The interviewer asks him why earth began writing; Fleming says he’d reversed 40, pole needed know take his mind dart the stagger of deed married. He goes on lock defend his books’ coition and mightiness. The interviewer asks Author if proscribed is himself a repulse of Bond; Fleming demurs, claiming memo be
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Goldeneye (1989 film)
For the James Bond film, see GoldenEye.
1989 British film
Goldeneye, also sometimes called Goldeneye: The Secret Life of Ian Fleming, is a 1989 British television film loosely based on the life of the author Ian Fleming, portrayed by Charles Dance, focusing on Fleming's life during the Second World War, his love life and the writing of James Bond,[3] and directed by Don Boyd. The film is based on The Life of Ian Fleming (1966), a biography by John Pearson, who was Fleming's assistant in the 1950s and has access to his private papers.[4][5] The film's screenwriter, Reg Gadney, also has a small part as James Bond, the American ornithologist who lent his name to Fleming's famous spy.[6]
The Anglia Television's dramatised biography takes its name from Fleming's estate in Jamaica (the title was later used for the James Bondfilm). The film received mixed reviews, with praise for Dance's portrayal of Fleming.[7]
Cast
[edit]Adrian Edmondson as ADC to Admiral
Notes
[edit]- ^Film Writers (Ifilm Publishing, 2001), p. 161
- ^ abKate Bales, Cinematographers, Production Designers, Costume Designers & Film Editors Guide (Lone Eagle, 1999), p. 114
- ^McEntee, John (2 April
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Charles Dance
English actor (born 1946)
This article is about the contemporary English actor. For other uses, see Charles Dance (disambiguation).
Charles Dance
OBE
Dance in July 2012
Born Walter Charles Dance
(1946-10-10) 10 October 1946 (age 78)Redditch, Worcestershire, England
Occupation Actor Years active 1971–present Spouse Joanna Haythorn
(m. 1970; div. 2004)Children 3 Walter Charles Dance (born 10 October 1946) is an English actor. He is known for playing intimidating, authoritarian characters and villains. Dance started his career on stage with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) before appearing in film and television. For his services to drama he was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in 2006.[1]
He made his feature film debut in the James Bond film For Your Eyes Only (1981). He since acted in a string of critically acclaimed period films such as Michael Collins (1996), Gosford Park (2001), The Imitation Game (2014), Mank (2020), and The King's Man (2021). He has also appeared in the films The Golden Child (1986), Alien 3 (1992), Last Action Hero (1993), Dracula Untold (20